Motorsport | Formula 1

Alonso thrills with stylish win

Two-time champion Fernando Alonso paid a warm tribute to his Ferrari team and the massive Spanish crowd on Sunday after he drove to a dominant victory for Ferrari at the Spanish Grand Prix.

His win thrilled his compatriots in a 95 000-strong flag-waving home crowd that roared in delight after he had crossed the line to grab his second win at his home race and third on Spanish soil in recent years.

"It was fantastically emotional and the fans really helped because you feel the support from everyone," said Alonso.

"The whole team took care of every single detail because we want the success here but we don't want it to stop there.

"We have only had five races and there have been some ups and downs but we know we have the car to fight with the top cars and if we do well we can compete for the championship."

It was his second win of the season, in five races, and the 32nd win of his career - a triumph that endorsed his challenge for a third drivers' title on an afternoon of Spanish supremacy at the Circuit de Catalunya.

Driving with great aplomb, Alonso delivered a beautifully-judged performance to win a tactical contest dominated by tyre-wear management, finishing 9.338 seconds ahead of second placed Finn Kimi Raikkonen of Lotus.

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Alonso's Ferrari teammate Felipe Massa started from ninth, but finished third ahead of defending triple world champion Sebastian Vettel and his Red Bull teammate Mark Webber.

Massa said: "I was a little disappointed after qualifying yesterday, but the race was very good for us and we were very aggressive. We struggled a bit on the tyres to survive in a good way - and the race was very good for us."

Raikkonen said: "I don't mind finishing second. I'm here only to do as good a race as I can and, despite finishing second, we have to take what we can from every race. We just have to keep working as a team to achieve the biggest goal we can."

Alonso's win bucked a trend at the Catalan circuit where 18 of the previous 22 events were won the driver who started from pole position.

This time the pole-sitting German Nico Rosberg of Mercedes finished sixth ahead of Paul Di Resta of Force India.

In the drivers' championship, Alonso jumped to third with 72 points behind leader Vettel on 89 and Raikkonen on 85.

The race featured the irony of last year's two fastest qualifiers Briton Lewis Hamilton then of McLaren, now with Mercedes, and race winner Venezuelan Pastor Maldonado of Williams battling for 14th position.

"I've been passed by a Williams now," said Hamilton in disgust at one stage. When warned about nursing his tyres, he responded: "I can't drive any slower."